Moral decay and Benny Morris
By Ali Abunimah
The Electronic Intifada
24 January 2004
electronicintifada.net/v2/article2369.shtml
When does the banishment of an entire people become morally
justified? That such a question can even be posed in today's Israel
is dismal testament to the transformation of Zionism into what it
claims to abhor. In two recent, extraordinary documents -- a
commentary in London's The Guardian and an interview with Ha'aretz --
Israeli historian Benny Morris prepared the ground for Israel to
justify any atrocity, no matter how much it transgresses human
rights, law and decency.
In a 9 January interview with Ari Shavit of Ha'aretz, Morris went
further than he ever did in describing the 1948 exodus of
Palestinians as the result of deliberate "transfer" by the Zionist
militias. Far from being horrified, however, Morris said: "There are
circumstances in history that justify ethnic cleansing." He admitted
that a "Jewish state would not have come into being without the
uprooting of 700,000 Palestinians. Therefore it was necessary to
uproot them. There was no choice but to expel that population. It
was necessary to cleanse the hinterland and cleanse the border areas
and cleanse the main roads ... (and) the villages from which our
convoys and our settlements were fired on."
Accepting this "necessity" stands on the belief that the Zionists
had an absolute, unquestionable right to establish by any means
necessary a Jewish state in Palestine, notwithstanding that the land
was already inhabited.
Morris recognized this weakness and tried to dispense with it in his
14 January Guardiancommentary. "Looking at the big picture," Morris
conceded, "there can be no avoiding the simple Arab argument: 'No
Zionism - no Palestinian refugee problem.' But adopting such a
slogan means accepting the view that a Jewish state should not have
been established in Palestine (or, presumably, anywhere else).
Neither can one avoid the standard Zionist rebuttal: 'No war - no
Palestinian refugee problem,' meaning that the problem wasn't
created by the Zionists but by the Arabs themselves, and stemmed
directly from their violent assault on Israel."
Morris knows -- because he has written the references on the subject
-- that this is pure fabrication. Indeed, he told Ha'aretz that he
recently found that in "the months of April-May 1948, units of the
Haganah were given operational orders that stated explicitly that
they were to uproot villagers, expel them and destroy the villages
themselves." How could the Zionist forces have reacted both in April
and earlier to an intervention by the Arab states that did not occur
until after 15 May 1948?
For Morris, Israel made a "serious historical mistake" in 1948,
because it did not do a "complete job" of forcing out all the
Palestinians. Asked if he would support the transfer and expulsion
of the Palestinians from Israel, the West Bank and Gaza today,
Morris' reply to Shavit was chilling: "I say not at this moment. I
am not willing to be a partner to that act. In the present
circumstances it is neither moral nor realistic. The world would not
allow it, the Arab world would not allow it, it would destroy the
Jewish society from within. But I am ready to tell you that in other
circumstances, apocalyptic ones, which are liable to be realized in
five or ten years, I can see expulsions."
Morris is already "a partner in this act" because he lays the
ideological groundwork for it in a context where Israeli Cabinet
members are already crying for "transfer," and where, bit by bit,
Israel is implementing in the Occupied Territories a process that
may lead to it. He makes ethnic cleansing moral and inevitable by
constructing an inhuman enemy whose essential disposition is not
inspired by any of Israel's actions.
Morris told Ha'aretz: "There is a deep problem in Islam. It's a
world whose values are different. A world in which human life
doesn't have the same value as it does in the West, and in which
freedom, democracy, openness and creativity are alien. A world that
makes those who are not part of the camp of Islam fair game ...
Therefore, the people we are fighting and the society that sends
them have no moral inhibitions. If it obtains chemical or biological
or atomic weapons, it will use them. If it is able, it will also
commit genocide."
Morris conflates all Palestinians with a de-historicized, monolithic
Muslim culture that is in ceaseless conflict with the West. To
mitigate Morris' anxieties about genocide, Israel -- the embodiment
of Western values -- must destroy the Palestinians. With such logic,
Morris the historian repudiates history as the pursuit of knowledge
and understanding.
In this context, consider how he addressed the issue of refugees in
The Guardian. Ignoring centuries of Muslim-Jewish coexistence and
recent post-conflict reconciliations, as in South Africa, Morris
premised that the return of the refugees or the creation of a
binational state could only result in "widespread anarchy and
violence" and the emigration or subjugation of the Jews "in an
authoritarian, Muslim-dominated, Arab-ruled state." Morris then
contended: "To many in the West, the right of refugees to return to
their homes seems natural and just. But this 'right of return' needs
to be weighed against the right to life and well-being of the 5
million Jews who live in Israel." Morris asked: "Wouldn't the
destruction, or at least the forced displacement of these 5 million
... constitute a far greater tragedy than what befell the
Palestinians in 1948, and, currently, a graver injustice than the
perpetuation of the refugeedom of fewer than 4 million
Palestinians?"
It is painful to read Morris' interview, in which he called
Palestinians "barbarians" who should be put in a "cage." But after
reading it, I heard an interview with black South African playwright
John Kani on National Public Radio. Kani recalled the frequent
interrogations he endured from a white intelligence officer: "He
used to tell us South Africa would never, ever change. This is a
God-created situation. They (white South Africans) were the chosen
people, not the Jews, and that South Africa was their country and we
didn't have the brains to become a free people, or even to think we
could govern."
Reflecting upon those experiences today, Kani said: "I am just
laughing, because he was stupid. You can't turn the tide of freedom
... A people who fight for freedom will be free. They've got God on
their side; they've got time on their side; they've got truth on
their side. It doesn't matter how strong the enemy is, it's only
delaying the inevitable."
Palestine-Israel will, inevitably, become a democracy for all its
people. Inevitable, because through the collective efforts of those
who work for justice, we will make it so.
Ali Abunimah is co-founder of The Electronic Intifada. This article
was first published in The Daily Star.
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